Post on 11-Jul-2020
transcript
Flipped Learning and
Peer Instruction at
Harvard:
Observations on Eric Mazur's Physics
Course
Dinçer Özoran, 30 May 2019
April, 2019
Leading Questions
1. A Flipped course at Harvard, what does it look like?
2. How grading works in this course? What is team-based assessment? Is
team-based assessment cheating?
3. What do Harvard students like in this course? What are their
challenges?
4. What were/are the challenges for Eric Mazur?
The Context (Long Story Short)
E R I C M A Z U R
Rich ?
Main Goal and Design of the Course
Main goal : Promote intrinsic motivation to learn
Design : Projects and team-based learning
in a “flipped classroom” framework.
Projects: Students take ownership of their learning.
Teams : Social responsibility, “do not let the team down!”
Flipped : Information transfer OUT
Cognitively engaging tasks IN class
Context of the Course
Title : AP 50 -
Applied Physics
Offered at: School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences (SEAS)
Sciences: Applied Math., Computer Sc.
Engineering: Environmental, Mechanical,
Electrical, Bio
SEAS : Students
decide departments at the end of 1st year.
Who take AP 50 Course?
Before graduation, SEAS students need to take
1 course from Intro to Physics Track Options:
AP 50 + other two traditional courses
Students from 1st year (Freshman) to 4th year
(Senior) are enrolled.
The capacity of the course is limited to 75 Ss.
Workforce: Team-teaching
2 Instructors co-teach:
In total they have 120+ patents.
TQ researchers!
Prof. Eric
Mazur
Prof. Federico
Capasso
Workforce: Team-teaching
10 TAs: Grads and PostDocs
Teaching staff meetings:
2 hours per week
75 students, 12 teaching staff:
1 staff per 6 students! ?
Introduction to Physics:
Topics:
● mechanics,
● waves,
● electricity and magnetism,
● circuits,
● optics
What is the course about?
1990s
What is the course about?
1 year course:
● PART I in Fall
● PART II in Spring
6 hours class time per week.
No Labs.
No Lecture.
No Exams.
2010s
Before Class
In-class
In-class
In-class
Post-class (Throughout)
3 cycle per
Semester
Grading
Any Questions so far?
Mazur’s Challenges
1981: started at Harvard as Postdoc
1984: started Teaching at Harvard
End of 80s: Begin experimenting Peer
Instruction
1990-2000s: Resistance, struggle,
discouragement, insult, resistance,
discouragement, struggle, insult, resistance,
praise, resistance, etc..
“A Nobel Laureate Professor attacked me on
how I teach, I could not reply (I was in my
30s)”
Students said: “You are not teaching!”
1996: Published Peer Instruction Book
2012: Moving from amphitheater to “flipped”
classroom.
2014: Begin to think of new ways for
assessment.
Team-Based Assessment (TBA) Jang, H.,
Lasry, N., Miller, K., & Mazur, E. (2017)
Perceived problems for TBA:
● lack of individual accountability
● help weaker students, not stronger
students
Procedure:
● Two round open-ended questions
● 1st round individual, 2nd round team-
based
● Individual and team scores are combined.
2nd round,
team-based
Team-Based Assessment (TBA) Jang, H.,
Lasry, N., Miller, K., & Mazur, E. (2017)
The research results (Mazur Group):
● Half of the teams with no correct answers
in ind. Round manage to get the correct
answer.
Team-Based Assessment (TBA) Jang, H.,
Lasry, N., Miller, K., & Mazur, E. (2017)
● Both weak and strong students have
gained
Student Interviews
My General Questions:
● Why did you take this course?
● What is different about this
course? (compared to other
courses you take)
● What did you like about this
course?
● What were the challenges you
had during the semester?
4 Students were Interviewed
1 Economy
1 Freshman
1 Electrical Engineering
1 Mechanical Engineering
4th year, 1st year,
2nd year (x2)
GPAs [3.6 - 3.8]
What they appreciate...
● Course help me understand and talk
about how things happen it our
everyday life. I can connect what I’ve
learned with what I experience in my
life.
● It is fun
● Most other courses are like a survival
process, if you can hold on you survive
otherwise you are eliminated (natural
selection).
● The level of stress is balanced, spaced
, fluid learning experience and it is
never high like other courses where
you have Midterm and Finals. (Thanks
to the course designed)
Stress for Freshman (200 students, 10 weeks)Garett, R., Liu, S., & Young, S. D. (2017)
midterms finals
wee
ks
Their Challenges
● When I do readings on my own, I
cannot ask questions about thing that I
could not understand. If I were in a
classroom and listening to a lecture I
could do that.
● Gradings are on effort not the results
we have. Sometimes grading is very
vague and not fair. I want to know
exactly what I did, how I performed
● Flipping Introduction to Physics ok, but
what about more complex/advanced
courses in Engineering ? Doing pre-class
activities on such subjects… I’m not sure.
● Some teams are better than others...
My Observations
● Eric Mazur cares a lot his students, how deep they learn, how effective
they learn
● He collects every single data (since 1984) and analyzes, compares LOs.
● He is well organized (and passionate) so that his physics research and
teaching goes together successfully.
● The course has a lot of details, dimensions, you can get lots of new
ideas.
My Observations
● There are a lot of workload on TAs, most of them were not very
motivated to help the course, they were also stressed and overwhelmed.
● The course has a lot of details, dimensions. In case you want to
replicate it, It would be hard to find the same workforce and manage it.
“Academy is
like a Mafia!”
Lack of external
accountability makes
very very hard to
change the way we
teach.
Thanks for
your attention. Any Questions?
References
Garett, R., Liu, S., & Young, S. D. (2017). A longitudinal analysis of stress among
incoming college freshmen. Journal of American college health : J of ACH, 65(5),
331–338. doi:10.1080/07448481.2017.1312413
Jang, H., Lasry, N., Miller, K., & Mazur, E. (2017). Collaborative exams:
Cheating? Or learning? American Journal of Physics.
http://doi.org/10.1119/1.4974744
Bibliography for team-based learning: https://learnification.files.wordpress.com/2017/05/gilley-ives-two-stage-
exam-workshop-ubco-learning-conference-2017-05-04.pdf
More Resources
http://www.teambasedlearning.org/
www.ericmazur.com
What is the most important part of Flipped
Learning?
Pre-class ?
In-class?